To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Page Four
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 1949
Class Numbers Dames to Throw
Video to Offer7'! ?Tan9e
In Fall Term
nformal Formal
Frosh Debaters SC Soprano to Vie Place in Meet For Audition Prize
Trojan Talent
dinarily be your admission charge i
Major Station Will Broadcast Weekly SC Variety Program
ie n
by AI Hix
Doggonit, these women sure can j has p.gw become your donation, i get things mixed up. j Anyway, your S2-per-couple dona- j
Take for instance this dance that j tion can be given to any member ! the SC Dames (they’re the wives j of the SC Dames, or it can be' of students on campus) are throw- i “donated" at the door Saturday | ing Saturday night in the student j night, the numbering sys- lounge beginning at 9.
Prefixes to Designate Curriculum Years
By Successive 100s
sm for all courses, effective Sept. | Granted that the gals have gone
TY has corm A weekly te! duced by the lege, will featu station KTRO
Thr>
the Ri
discuss pd
meetin
f oun da
will be, m
Spea
Dr. Jol
departi TiPI
mona
of the K
Adama
W:
Noon Music Series Offered
Noo
betv
ces ture talei G\ the of :
dis
Govt. Science Jobs Offered
Positions as aide! biological sciences various federal ag ington, the U.S. C mission announce!
The jobs pay $3727 per year.
Applicants must examination and. in the lowest f a have had experien< cical or biological riate college study tuted for Afe limii plications be on file
i physical and ; available in ies in Wash-Service com-recently.
lust pass a written id. except for those salary level, must nence in either phv-cal science. Approp-Ludv may be substi-rcquired experience, e 18 to 62 years. Ap-he examination must re Feb. 24.
DT and AWS Offices Seek Secretaries
Women interested in being AW! secretaries should sign up in th AWS office. 228 Student Union.
Secretaries are needed for th Daily Tro.ian editorial office an AWS offices.
Activity Coordinator June Walle also announced that women wh worked last semester as secretaire may have their activity card signed if they will leave them wit] Mrs. Waller in 226 Student Union.
TROY MEETS
SPURS
6:30 p.m.. ADPi house LUTHERAN STUDENT
Supper meeting. 5:30 35th street
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
3-4:30. 401 Student ' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 3:15, 418 Student Uni TROED
12:30. Student Loungi ROGER WILLIAMS 12, 3713 South H
ASSN. 1039 Wi
er bLrtM
JOHNNY KEENE
AUTO TOPS
Convertible Coupes - S55 3221 So. Hoover PR. 6-9080
Of
Ji £>Ld.tiUl
Universit
pro-
Col-
our show. SC radio
1. 1949, Howard The n fix "IO” fix ‘T’
The c
Graphic Works
w.
'hedult
Forum Debates Russ Challenge
Can
Pres
will
Alt
.s announced today by | to a lot of trouble to make it a Patmore, registrar. ! success. That newly decorated plan will add the pre- i lounge is a fine place for a dance, courses 1 to 9: the pre- ! An(* tlie music promises to be excourses 10 to 49; the ! ^ra R°°d with Joe Williams and o courses 50 to 99. | society orchestra on the provid-ses 100 to 199. '-tarred, ' ln§ eud- The admission of $2 a • will char.se their first dieit from I couple is even down to where the j “1” to “4"; courses 200 to 299 will I ordinary $75-a-month GI can change the first digit from "2” to ■ handle it without wincing. But “5.'’ -6'’ or "7.” i l00^ at what those silly women
Courses that do not carry college j ^ to the name: j credit will be numbered below 100, ^he Sweetheart Formal, ini- j as 010. 020. or 030. the second digit j DUBBED WRONG
indicating the load. Uniform numbers are to be used for present I being held on Lincoln’s birthday courses 260. 261, 290. and 299—260 ! so the hausfraus could have dub-to become 590; 261ab to become | bed it the Woodchopper’s Ball, or 594ab or 694ab; 290ab to become J the Springfield Sprint, or some- black and white 790ab; 299ab to bccome 794ab. ] thing appropriate. But no. They Courses in dentistry, medicine, {have to jump ahead a couple of and law will begin with numbers days and borrow an idea from be made ' anc* respectively, and j £ood old St. Valentine.
extend through as many hundreds I Then too. there’s that
in the curricu- “formal.” Makes you think of white
Students Show German Prints
b titled Tommy
my types of gh the teleshowcase tor ar will serve emonies each
Proof of a successful foray into J international relations by the ; Printmakers club at SC is now on | display in 103 Harris hall in the In the first place, the dance is I form of graphic works of art from i
as there are year
Germany and SC.
The exhibit of etchings and engravings was first placed on display September of 1948 in Sommerhausen. Germany, through the efforts of Mrs. Cath-word ! erine Fels. local artist, and Col. Andre Kormendi of the American military government in Germany. German works in the exhibit
;nted Trojans may audition at . Thursday for spots on the Appointments may vith Don Baisch. talent sector SC's television producat €38 West 36th street, from | *um- The breakdown of numbers is [ tie. tails, and all that sort of stuff.
4 p.m. Thursday. The only as follows: I But this dig is strictly semi-formal,
ite for aspirants*is that they I 1Q0 to 199 courses for freshmen. I To quote Mrs. A. C. Goodman, one j
Thursday and Friday night's j 200 to 299 courses for sophomores. °f the chicks who are apparently [ were arranged for by one of the or rehearsals. j 300 to 399 upper division courses in charge of the affair:
pes of entertainment j not £ivin& graduate credit. i ALL INVITED
ded are musical numbers, in- I 400 to upper division courses I ‘‘Either formal or informal wear ling vocalists, instrumentalists, giving graduate credit. j for the women will be appropriate,
s. vaudeville acts, imperson- 500 to 599 first year graduate Our main interest is in recruiting ns, juggling and dancing. Any courses. some new members and seeing
*>n enrolled in an SC class is 600 to 699 second year graduate j that everyone has a good time, ible. whether amateur or pro- courses. I The wife of every man on the SC
ional. There will be no exploi- j 7C0 to 799 third year graduate I campus is invited—with her hus-on of talent, Baisch said. 1 courses. band, of course—and we hope they
all turn out.”
Oh. There’s one other thing.
Am
Heavy Wyoming Snows Keep 14 Trains Trapped
exhibiting artists, Luigi Mailipiero. j scenery designer of the German j stage. Among other represented artists from overseas is Rudolph Drossbach whose drawings were done five years ago at the age of 15 to illustrate Oscar Wilde’s '‘Ballad of Reading Goal.” According to Dr. Jules Heller, instructor of printmaking, “the pres-
dance. All the proceeds are to go | to charity, so that what would or- I
GREEN RIVER WYO .Pi—Fourteen Union Pacific trains re snowbound in this small Wyo-ting town, nearly doubling its opulation ar.d posing problems of >od. shelter and even currency ex-
en route to meet
, ent exhibit will probably be the They aren't selling 'bids” to ‘Ms | flret in a long series of an exchanjr
displays if it is a success at SC and
other colleges and universities
where the works will be shown.”
Among the works on display are
those of Catherine Fels, Joe Funk,
Thorwald M. Bock. Shelley Schoen-
berner, Nathan S. Thompson,
| George Gallegos, Betty Williams,
Office Helps Job Seekers
Dn
Feb. 7— | Ogden. Utah, that problem.
The stranded travelers are running out of money, and the checks presented for cashing are fast ex-i hausting Green River’s normally I Students desiring part- or full- | Richard S. Finley, Morton Deiner j adequate reserves of cash currency, time jobs may submit their appli- j Dr- Heller, and Mitchell L. Rawley, 15 to 20 feet deep, winds The telegraph wires are hot with cations to the employment office, at 60 to 70 miles an hour messages to “please wire fifty care j 322 Student Union, during the bu- j bzero tempera- Western Cnion.”
m
be
TRAINS STALLED
Three of the trains set out east from Green River yesterday and got as ar as Riner, 92 miles away,
ana Knue-snar
tures have stranded the trains here, and no one knows when they will roll again.
Some of the stalled trains already have been here mere than 36 hours, and Carl Carlson, Green j before five and six-foot drifts and River stationmaster has resi°ned *our-below temperatures forced a
himself to playing ’host to guests halt’ Tke trains were stalled there cn mass * ~ I 3 a.m. today, when an extra
During the Jan 2 to 5 blizzard I engine wa5 sent out to helP them six trains were stranded here, and back t0 °reen River*
Carlson got in some practice in * The 184-mile roundtrip required caring for the demands of hun- I more than 25 hours, and the dis-dreds of stalled travelers. ! couraged passengers still had got
MORALE GOOD nowhere.
Tne general morale of the more j Four other trains bucked through than 2000 travelers is good and the as far as Wamsutter. They too principal worries are of loved ones, were rescued and returned here by sick in distant towns, “business sending out an extra locomotive, deals, and appointments long since I ANTELOPE RESCUED
over-due. So far no one has been Four hundred wild a.ntelope seriously ill. and on the whole the ! tame under the attack of the ele-marooned crowd of passengers has ments, were hauled into Green
reau’s regular office hours, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday.
Interviews for part-time work are conducted Tuesdays and Fridays at a designated time on an interview list. Students must sign up in the employment office at 8 a.m. on the day the interview is desired.
The line of applicants for interviews usually begins to form be-for 8 o'clock. Appointment lists are limited to about thirty names per day on a first-come, first-served basis.
Interviews for full-time career positions are held at the bureau daily and Saturday during regular office hours.
been reasonably cheerful.
When 2000 guests are suddenly dropped in on a town of less than 3000 inhabitants, a fe«d problem is sure to arise. A relief train from the Union Pacific commissary at,
River by truck today and placed in corals for feeding and watering.
Hundreds of dead antelope and deer can be seen from the train windows through this area. Resi-
Rushees Invited By Fraternities
Social Field Wide Open, Says Speaker
The 50 sohools of social work in the United States have calls for twice as many graduates as they can train, according to Dr. Grace L. Coyle of the School of Applied Social Sciences at Western Reserve university in Cleveland. Dr. Coyle spoke at the conclusion of a week-long institute for 100 employed group workers held on the campus j Jan. 24-28 by the School of Social Work.
“There are ten jobs for every | graduate,” Dr. Coyle .said, “and 11 would recommend that students I who like to work with people consider group social work as a career.”
Final exams took their toll, but some fast tongue work by a brace of freshman debaters brought j Troy's word flingers through the Caltech Invitational Debate tournament Jan. 14-15 with second-place laurels anyway.
Nearly hamstrung by a shortage of var ity debaters, most of whom were ruled out of the tourney by j acute attacks of finalitis, the SC squad was forced to weather the semester's forensic opener with i three lower division men's teams j and one women's team .
Performing like veterans, one of ‘ the men’s teams, composed of neo- j phytes Jim Norcop and Dave Cooney. copped second place honors j behind Pepperdine’s winning duo. j
The debate was the first on this semester’s topic, “Resolved, that the federal government should adopt a policy of equalizing educational opportunities in tax supported schools by means o f annual grants.”
Schools competing in the tournament included Caltech, UCLA. San Diego State. Los Angeles City College. Fasadena City college, Redlands. Pomona, and Weber college. \ Utah.
The SC squad is now readying ; for the UCLA Invitational Speech tournament scheduled for Feb. 12
Foreign Job Plan Offered
American Express company will ! begin in January to train men in- ! terested in lifetime business careers i abroad, according to information re- j ceived by Mrs. F. B. Watt, director j of the University Employment bureau.
Candidates for the training program, designed to develop foreign representatives, must have a coliege , degree in business administration or economics. They must be single, between the ages of 25 and 30. and 1 should have previous business experience. Fluency in a foreign lan-guage. while advantageous, is not a definite requirement.
Men selected as trainees will be sent to New York for instruction. SC alumni or graduate students may make application in 322 Student Union.
Fashion Show and Party To Welcome New Women
A welcome to new women students wiil be given Thursday with , a party sponsored by AWS.
The party .under the direction of Orientation Chairman Rita Marie Kreiziger, will feature a fashion show. It will be held in EVK from 3:15-5. Old students are also invited. Miss Kreiziger said.
SC's first entrant in the $15.00G annual Atwater Kent auditions for 1949 is lyric soprano Emily! Fichard . a music education major Miss Richards will sing “Depuis le Jour” from the opera "Louise.” Several seasons ’ago. Miss Richards sang the part of Mimi in a campus presentation of "La Boheme.” Three years ago she was a finalist in the KFI Hollywood bowl auditions. She also traveled around southern California with a local company, playing the role of Gretel in “Hansel and Gretel.”
Miss Richards now works for Prof. Charles A. Dodson, head of the petroleum engineering department, and attends late afternoon and evening classes.
The following awards totalling $15,000 will be distributed to 10
winners of the Atwater Kent al*. ditions: two first prizes of S2ojo each, two second prizes of $17 two third prizes of 51500. v, r fourth prizes of $1250. and -fifth prizes of 5100O.
Individual hearings for all cc , testant - are scheduled to be early in March. Preliminar.es w ! be held in Los Angeles. Hollyw j Santa Barbara, and San Francis*
! Finalists will oe heard in Los /
: geles over two nationwide br ; cast '.
Non - professional vocalist i tween the ages of 18 to , eligible to compete for
prizes. Applications may : tained by writing the Atwater foundation. Box 1511. Hollyw t There is no entry fee.
Hoover Warns Congress On Reorganization Plan
WASHINGTON. Feb. 7—<Ui?)—
Former President Herbert Hoover
warned Congress today that efforts to exempt certain Federal agencies from reorganization might wreck plans to streamline the government.
He advised a Congressional investigation at once of a “very great prcpoganda” campaign to exempt the Army engineers, which he suggested might be inspired by private contractors.
If that campaign works, he testified, “we might as well quit tomorrow; if Congress responds to that pressure once, it will have to respond 50 times."
Mr. Hoover, who heads a bi-partisan commission on government reorganization, testified before the Senate Executive Expenditures committee. He supported legislation to give President Truman broad powers to remake the Executive
Branch of the government ' save "billions of dollars.”
At the same time the H ] commission submitted its : recommendations to Congress improving the Executive br including a proposal that 65 j partments and agencies be squ | ed into "about one-third."
I
Skeele Doing ‘Very W Following Major Surg
The Queen of Angels hospital j ported la~t night that Fran Skeele. director of the unive news bureau, was doing “very w : following a major operation.
Skeele entered the hospital week ago and is expected to be : leased the latter part of this w Hospital authorities did not I veal the nature of the operation.
THE ORIGINAL
Carl’s
RESTAURANTS
Since 1931
"A Tradition of S.C."
WHERE FLOWER MEETS FIGUEROA
Delicious Food, Delightfully Served in Pleasant Surroundings
Di scs of Plays
Entertain Actors
Ri d Lawrence, assistant
pro I essor of drama, entertained
? tha n 40 students and faculty
men cav. bers in his home last Wednes-
Di the evening Lawrence
ed r ecordings he had made
duri ng tl le fall semester of one-act
pi ax- s wr itten in his plavwriting
el a si ». Ma my of the student actors
and pla? wrights who contributed
to the p lays were present.
Among the guests were Prof. and
Mrs. Will iam C. rie Mille. Mr. and
Mr-. Pa j1 F. Blackburn. Adele
Cool t. Ro ry Guy. and Jack Garriss.
Dr. Neumeyer Writes
Youth Delinquency Text
A new text book. “Juvenile De-
linq' iency
Dr. Mart n H Neumeyer. professor
of sociology, was published last
Tl ie 340-page book covers the
caus es. ti eatment. and methods of
rol of delinquency. It will be
used in the Delinquency Control
insti tute and for classes in sociol-
ogy 115.
Open house on fraternity row j, begins tonight at 7 to help pros- I dents say about half have frozen | pective rushees investigate all,
or starved and the other half have houses without formal invitations. ',_
been hit by trains. The animals | Pledging is limited to four weeks , Desk Editor
seek firm footing along the rail-
Today s Staff
F. R. Ashley
and all names and necessary in- Assistant Desk Editor
read right-of-way, where previous formation must be submitted to trips oi plows have left the snow yie 0ffjce 0f the counselor of men less deep. j a|. cioe Gf this period, or the
The Utahan, eastbound from Las rushee not, he considered a Angeles, was pulled in here after j pjecj„e
Names of men who have visited a house and were found ineligible for admittance to that house will be available to rushees tomorrow “Normally, you can see IV2 to 3 ^ ^he oifice of the counselor of miles ahead from the cab of a lo- j men. comotive.” Little said. “I couldn’t | see my hand right in front of the cab window. I couldn’t see the safety signals and could only tell ... will meet at 1 p.m. Wednesday when they were green by the flash i instead of Tuesday, this week. All through the snow.” I members must attend.
being stranded at Bitter Creek, Wwo. Ed Little, the engineer, told I of inching along at five miles an j hour during the height of the ; storm.
.............................Ursula Baumann
Copyreaders ........Warren McClain,
Yolanda D’Amico. Matt Martin, Jerry Boyd.
Reporters ... Don Moyer. Bill Rou-pen, Ralph Broms, Leon Furgatch, James Kalivas, Ralph Hornbcck. Don Sorenson, Jim Werner, Art Mesch.
SDX
"Tired ol Those Ties?"
Send us two to six and SI.00. Receive the same number, different handsomely cleaned.
COLLEGIATE TIE EXCHANGE
Box 90, Friley Ames, Iowa
CLASSIFIED ADS
ALL CLASSIFIED ADS MUST BE PREPAID )M 326 STUDENT UNION - NO CLASSIFIEDS TAKEN AFTER 2:15 PM
GARAGE WANTED
! MUSIC INSTRUMENT
j GARAGE Wanted rear 28th St. and University Ave. Call RI. 4111. Ext. 298.
HELP WANTED
PIANOS FOR P.EXT—Spinets, uprights, grands. Rental may apply on purchase. Reeds Music Store, 470S South Vermont. AD. 3-5151.
■IVE
ROOM <S BOARD
French Dipped Sandwiches
“Half a Hog — and a Loaf of Bread”
f)Ec **»<d*
SLIM OELEYS
4149 So. Western Ave.
One Block South of Santa Barbara TABLES FOR PARTIES • WE NEVER CLOSE «
Student—Wanted
Earn $100 to $300 I ---
next semester. For j THE PINEHURST te Terrace Law Pub-Margaret St., Flint.
131 S. Fisueroa. Seconds served at every meal. Rates from $56 to $60. The best place around the Campus. RI. 716S1.
TYPING
EXPERT TYPIST NEAR CAMPUS. RI.
73126.
TYPIST—Experienced. Thesis and term papers. 544 West 40th Place. AD .17856.
TYPING—CALL PA. 7139.
TAILORING—SLACKS
LOST AND FOUND
REPAIR SERVICE
vicinity of le papers and AN .1-3449.
CIGARETTE Liehters 72 hour service. Tc
SLACKS! SLACKS! SLACKS
MIMEOGRAPHING
MIMEOGP.APHIN'G Service—Tam’s Books
Inc.. 72j West Jefferson.
MEDICAL BOOKS
RESEARCH
Campus. Reward. aVluable papera and Books. Inc. 725 West Jefferson.
REFERENCE editing, bibliographies. 920 So. Hobart Blvd. Res. Phone FE-7127.
WANTED—MISCELLANEOUS
PRACTICE ROOM with piano for music student. Call RI. 4111. Ext. 225 or CE. 23555 after 5:30 p.m.
Men’s
slacks, custom tailored tu your IndiWd-ual measurements. 100^ wool gabardine. doeskin. sharkskin, flannels— styled to your own desire. FACTORY PRICED TO YOU. $14.95. Diamond of California, 3511 So. Fisueroa. RI. 7-
TYPEWRITERS
TYPEWRITERS—All makes sold, rented, repaired, exchanged. University Type-writers and Adding Machine Company. 3703 S. Vermont. PA. 1512.
THIS WEEK
AT THE
PHOTOGRAPHIC DEPARTMENT
EL RODEO PORTRA'T APPOINTMENTS
Feb. 7 lo Noon Feb. 9
Phi Della Chi Acacia
Aipha Epsilon Pi Alpha Rho Chi Bela Thela Pi
Feb. 14 lo Neon Feb. 16
Delta Chi Della Sigma Phi Delta Tau Dalta Kappa Alpha Kappa Alpha Psi
Noon Feb. 9 lhru Feb. 12
Chi Phi
Lambda Chi Alpha Tau Delta Phi Tau Kappa Epsilon
Saturday, Feb. 12
Della Sigma Delta Xi Psi Phi
NEXT WEEK
Noon Feb. 16 lhru Feb. 19
Kappa Sigma Tau Epsilon Phi Sigma Alpha Mu Phi Delta Theta
Saturday, Feb. 19
Delta Siqma Delta Xi Psi Phi
MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW
If you have a portrait negative in our files, please use it. Or-ler from the receptionist in our Department, at only $1.00 (inc. lax), saving of 80c below the cost of having a new sitting made.
S. 0. Photographic Dept.
3522 University Ave. Rl. 4111 - Ext. 348

Page Four
Tuesday, Feb. 8, 1949
Class Numbers Dames to Throw
Video to Offer7'! ?Tan9e
In Fall Term
nformal Formal
Frosh Debaters SC Soprano to Vie Place in Meet For Audition Prize
Trojan Talent
dinarily be your admission charge i
Major Station Will Broadcast Weekly SC Variety Program
ie n
by AI Hix
Doggonit, these women sure can j has p.gw become your donation, i get things mixed up. j Anyway, your S2-per-couple dona- j
Take for instance this dance that j tion can be given to any member ! the SC Dames (they’re the wives j of the SC Dames, or it can be' of students on campus) are throw- i “donated" at the door Saturday | ing Saturday night in the student j night, the numbering sys- lounge beginning at 9.
Prefixes to Designate Curriculum Years
By Successive 100s
sm for all courses, effective Sept. | Granted that the gals have gone
TY has corm A weekly te! duced by the lege, will featu station KTRO
Thr>
the Ri
discuss pd
meetin
f oun da
will be, m
Spea
Dr. Jol
departi TiPI
mona
of the K
Adama
W:
Noon Music Series Offered
Noo
betv
ces ture talei G\ the of :
dis
Govt. Science Jobs Offered
Positions as aide! biological sciences various federal ag ington, the U.S. C mission announce!
The jobs pay $3727 per year.
Applicants must examination and. in the lowest f a have had experien< cical or biological riate college study tuted for Afe limii plications be on file
i physical and ; available in ies in Wash-Service com-recently.
lust pass a written id. except for those salary level, must nence in either phv-cal science. Approp-Ludv may be substi-rcquired experience, e 18 to 62 years. Ap-he examination must re Feb. 24.
DT and AWS Offices Seek Secretaries
Women interested in being AW! secretaries should sign up in th AWS office. 228 Student Union.
Secretaries are needed for th Daily Tro.ian editorial office an AWS offices.
Activity Coordinator June Walle also announced that women wh worked last semester as secretaire may have their activity card signed if they will leave them wit] Mrs. Waller in 226 Student Union.
TROY MEETS
SPURS
6:30 p.m.. ADPi house LUTHERAN STUDENT
Supper meeting. 5:30 35th street
ALPHA PHI OMEGA
3-4:30. 401 Student ' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 3:15, 418 Student Uni TROED
12:30. Student Loungi ROGER WILLIAMS 12, 3713 South H
ASSN. 1039 Wi
er bLrtM
JOHNNY KEENE
AUTO TOPS
Convertible Coupes - S55 3221 So. Hoover PR. 6-9080
Of
Ji £>Ld.tiUl
Universit
pro-
Col-
our show. SC radio
1. 1949, Howard The n fix "IO” fix ‘T’
The c
Graphic Works
w.
'hedult
Forum Debates Russ Challenge
Can
Pres
will
Alt
.s announced today by | to a lot of trouble to make it a Patmore, registrar. ! success. That newly decorated plan will add the pre- i lounge is a fine place for a dance, courses 1 to 9: the pre- ! An(* tlie music promises to be excourses 10 to 49; the ! ^ra R°°d with Joe Williams and o courses 50 to 99. | society orchestra on the provid-ses 100 to 199. '-tarred, ' ln§ eud- The admission of $2 a • will char.se their first dieit from I couple is even down to where the j “1” to “4"; courses 200 to 299 will I ordinary $75-a-month GI can change the first digit from "2” to ■ handle it without wincing. But “5.'’ -6'’ or "7.” i l00^ at what those silly women
Courses that do not carry college j ^ to the name: j credit will be numbered below 100, ^he Sweetheart Formal, ini- j as 010. 020. or 030. the second digit j DUBBED WRONG
indicating the load. Uniform numbers are to be used for present I being held on Lincoln’s birthday courses 260. 261, 290. and 299—260 ! so the hausfraus could have dub-to become 590; 261ab to become | bed it the Woodchopper’s Ball, or 594ab or 694ab; 290ab to become J the Springfield Sprint, or some- black and white 790ab; 299ab to bccome 794ab. ] thing appropriate. But no. They Courses in dentistry, medicine, {have to jump ahead a couple of and law will begin with numbers days and borrow an idea from be made ' anc* respectively, and j £ood old St. Valentine.
extend through as many hundreds I Then too. there’s that
in the curricu- “formal.” Makes you think of white
Students Show German Prints
b titled Tommy
my types of gh the teleshowcase tor ar will serve emonies each
Proof of a successful foray into J international relations by the ; Printmakers club at SC is now on | display in 103 Harris hall in the In the first place, the dance is I form of graphic works of art from i
as there are year
Germany and SC.
The exhibit of etchings and engravings was first placed on display September of 1948 in Sommerhausen. Germany, through the efforts of Mrs. Cath-word ! erine Fels. local artist, and Col. Andre Kormendi of the American military government in Germany. German works in the exhibit
;nted Trojans may audition at . Thursday for spots on the Appointments may vith Don Baisch. talent sector SC's television producat €38 West 36th street, from | *um- The breakdown of numbers is [ tie. tails, and all that sort of stuff.
4 p.m. Thursday. The only as follows: I But this dig is strictly semi-formal,
ite for aspirants*is that they I 1Q0 to 199 courses for freshmen. I To quote Mrs. A. C. Goodman, one j
Thursday and Friday night's j 200 to 299 courses for sophomores. °f the chicks who are apparently [ were arranged for by one of the or rehearsals. j 300 to 399 upper division courses in charge of the affair:
pes of entertainment j not £ivin& graduate credit. i ALL INVITED
ded are musical numbers, in- I 400 to upper division courses I ‘‘Either formal or informal wear ling vocalists, instrumentalists, giving graduate credit. j for the women will be appropriate,
s. vaudeville acts, imperson- 500 to 599 first year graduate Our main interest is in recruiting ns, juggling and dancing. Any courses. some new members and seeing
*>n enrolled in an SC class is 600 to 699 second year graduate j that everyone has a good time, ible. whether amateur or pro- courses. I The wife of every man on the SC
ional. There will be no exploi- j 7C0 to 799 third year graduate I campus is invited—with her hus-on of talent, Baisch said. 1 courses. band, of course—and we hope they
all turn out.”
Oh. There’s one other thing.
Am
Heavy Wyoming Snows Keep 14 Trains Trapped
exhibiting artists, Luigi Mailipiero. j scenery designer of the German j stage. Among other represented artists from overseas is Rudolph Drossbach whose drawings were done five years ago at the age of 15 to illustrate Oscar Wilde’s '‘Ballad of Reading Goal.” According to Dr. Jules Heller, instructor of printmaking, “the pres-
dance. All the proceeds are to go | to charity, so that what would or- I
GREEN RIVER WYO .Pi—Fourteen Union Pacific trains re snowbound in this small Wyo-ting town, nearly doubling its opulation ar.d posing problems of >od. shelter and even currency ex-
en route to meet
, ent exhibit will probably be the They aren't selling 'bids” to ‘Ms | flret in a long series of an exchanjr
displays if it is a success at SC and
other colleges and universities
where the works will be shown.”
Among the works on display are
those of Catherine Fels, Joe Funk,
Thorwald M. Bock. Shelley Schoen-
berner, Nathan S. Thompson,
| George Gallegos, Betty Williams,
Office Helps Job Seekers
Dn
Feb. 7— | Ogden. Utah, that problem.
The stranded travelers are running out of money, and the checks presented for cashing are fast ex-i hausting Green River’s normally I Students desiring part- or full- | Richard S. Finley, Morton Deiner j adequate reserves of cash currency, time jobs may submit their appli- j Dr- Heller, and Mitchell L. Rawley, 15 to 20 feet deep, winds The telegraph wires are hot with cations to the employment office, at 60 to 70 miles an hour messages to “please wire fifty care j 322 Student Union, during the bu- j bzero tempera- Western Cnion.”
m
be
TRAINS STALLED
Three of the trains set out east from Green River yesterday and got as ar as Riner, 92 miles away,
ana Knue-snar
tures have stranded the trains here, and no one knows when they will roll again.
Some of the stalled trains already have been here mere than 36 hours, and Carl Carlson, Green j before five and six-foot drifts and River stationmaster has resi°ned *our-below temperatures forced a
himself to playing ’host to guests halt’ Tke trains were stalled there cn mass * ~ I 3 a.m. today, when an extra
During the Jan 2 to 5 blizzard I engine wa5 sent out to helP them six trains were stranded here, and back t0 °reen River*
Carlson got in some practice in * The 184-mile roundtrip required caring for the demands of hun- I more than 25 hours, and the dis-dreds of stalled travelers. ! couraged passengers still had got
MORALE GOOD nowhere.
Tne general morale of the more j Four other trains bucked through than 2000 travelers is good and the as far as Wamsutter. They too principal worries are of loved ones, were rescued and returned here by sick in distant towns, “business sending out an extra locomotive, deals, and appointments long since I ANTELOPE RESCUED
over-due. So far no one has been Four hundred wild a.ntelope seriously ill. and on the whole the ! tame under the attack of the ele-marooned crowd of passengers has ments, were hauled into Green
reau’s regular office hours, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday.
Interviews for part-time work are conducted Tuesdays and Fridays at a designated time on an interview list. Students must sign up in the employment office at 8 a.m. on the day the interview is desired.
The line of applicants for interviews usually begins to form be-for 8 o'clock. Appointment lists are limited to about thirty names per day on a first-come, first-served basis.
Interviews for full-time career positions are held at the bureau daily and Saturday during regular office hours.
been reasonably cheerful.
When 2000 guests are suddenly dropped in on a town of less than 3000 inhabitants, a fe«d problem is sure to arise. A relief train from the Union Pacific commissary at,
River by truck today and placed in corals for feeding and watering.
Hundreds of dead antelope and deer can be seen from the train windows through this area. Resi-
Rushees Invited By Fraternities
Social Field Wide Open, Says Speaker
The 50 sohools of social work in the United States have calls for twice as many graduates as they can train, according to Dr. Grace L. Coyle of the School of Applied Social Sciences at Western Reserve university in Cleveland. Dr. Coyle spoke at the conclusion of a week-long institute for 100 employed group workers held on the campus j Jan. 24-28 by the School of Social Work.
“There are ten jobs for every | graduate,” Dr. Coyle .said, “and 11 would recommend that students I who like to work with people consider group social work as a career.”
Final exams took their toll, but some fast tongue work by a brace of freshman debaters brought j Troy's word flingers through the Caltech Invitational Debate tournament Jan. 14-15 with second-place laurels anyway.
Nearly hamstrung by a shortage of var ity debaters, most of whom were ruled out of the tourney by j acute attacks of finalitis, the SC squad was forced to weather the semester's forensic opener with i three lower division men's teams j and one women's team .
Performing like veterans, one of ‘ the men’s teams, composed of neo- j phytes Jim Norcop and Dave Cooney. copped second place honors j behind Pepperdine’s winning duo. j
The debate was the first on this semester’s topic, “Resolved, that the federal government should adopt a policy of equalizing educational opportunities in tax supported schools by means o f annual grants.”
Schools competing in the tournament included Caltech, UCLA. San Diego State. Los Angeles City College. Fasadena City college, Redlands. Pomona, and Weber college. \ Utah.
The SC squad is now readying ; for the UCLA Invitational Speech tournament scheduled for Feb. 12
Foreign Job Plan Offered
American Express company will ! begin in January to train men in- ! terested in lifetime business careers i abroad, according to information re- j ceived by Mrs. F. B. Watt, director j of the University Employment bureau.
Candidates for the training program, designed to develop foreign representatives, must have a coliege , degree in business administration or economics. They must be single, between the ages of 25 and 30. and 1 should have previous business experience. Fluency in a foreign lan-guage. while advantageous, is not a definite requirement.
Men selected as trainees will be sent to New York for instruction. SC alumni or graduate students may make application in 322 Student Union.
Fashion Show and Party To Welcome New Women
A welcome to new women students wiil be given Thursday with , a party sponsored by AWS.
The party .under the direction of Orientation Chairman Rita Marie Kreiziger, will feature a fashion show. It will be held in EVK from 3:15-5. Old students are also invited. Miss Kreiziger said.
SC's first entrant in the $15.00G annual Atwater Kent auditions for 1949 is lyric soprano Emily! Fichard . a music education major Miss Richards will sing “Depuis le Jour” from the opera "Louise.” Several seasons ’ago. Miss Richards sang the part of Mimi in a campus presentation of "La Boheme.” Three years ago she was a finalist in the KFI Hollywood bowl auditions. She also traveled around southern California with a local company, playing the role of Gretel in “Hansel and Gretel.”
Miss Richards now works for Prof. Charles A. Dodson, head of the petroleum engineering department, and attends late afternoon and evening classes.
The following awards totalling $15,000 will be distributed to 10
winners of the Atwater Kent al*. ditions: two first prizes of S2ojo each, two second prizes of $17 two third prizes of 51500. v, r fourth prizes of $1250. and -fifth prizes of 5100O.
Individual hearings for all cc , testant - are scheduled to be early in March. Preliminar.es w ! be held in Los Angeles. Hollyw j Santa Barbara, and San Francis*
! Finalists will oe heard in Los /
: geles over two nationwide br ; cast '.
Non - professional vocalist i tween the ages of 18 to , eligible to compete for
prizes. Applications may : tained by writing the Atwater foundation. Box 1511. Hollyw t There is no entry fee.
Hoover Warns Congress On Reorganization Plan
WASHINGTON. Feb. 7—